flat-coated retriever, his shadow for the past four years.
âMissing.â
âMissing?â
âSince yesterday.â
âOh, Tom . . .â
âIâm sure itâs nothing,â he replied with as much non chalance as he could muster. âMaybe he needs a holiday too.â
But it wasnât like Hector to go off for more than an hour or so, and only then to scrounge scraps from the customers at the bar in Le Rayol. Hector was a big coward at heart, although like all the best cowards he cloaked his fears in bold and boisterous behaviour.
âItâs not the first time heâs done a disappearing act. Iâm sure heâll turn up as soon as he knows youâre here.â
Lucy looked unconvinced but was happy to play along if it spared them both the discomfort of any further discussion.
âSo, what do you think?â she said brightly, flicking her fingers through her cropped hair and throwing in a theatrical little pout for effect.
âI think your motherâs going to need a very stiff drink.â
âThat wasnât the question.â
âI think,â Tom intoned with deliberation, âthat you are more beautiful than ever.â
Lucy smiled. âSpoken like a true godfather.â
Tomâs car was parked out front in the shade of a tall palm. The porter set about loading the bags into the boot.
âA new car,â Lucy observed.
âNot new, just different.â
âItâs a lot smaller than the last.â
âAh, but this one doesnât break down.â
âWhereâs the fun in that?â
She was referring to the previous summer and the day-trip with her family which had turned into a two-day-trip when the big Citroën had resolutely refused to start, stranding them as the sun was going down at a remote beach on the headland beyond Gigaro. There had been just enough food left in the picnic hamper to cobble together a simple supper and they had hunkered down for the night. Lucyâs half-brothers, George and Harry, had slept in the car, the rest of them under the stars around a driftwood fire, cocooned in Persian rugs. Leonard had embraced the setback with his usual sunny good humour, and even Venetia, who relished her creature comforts, had entered into the spirit of the occasion, leading them in a repertoire of Gilbert and Sullivan numbers, which had set Hector howling in protest. Remarkably, Leonard and Venetia had gone a whole evening without arguing, although they had bickered like a couple of old fishwives during the long and dusty march back to Gigaro the following morning.
âDonât worry,â said Tom, âIâve already planned another night at the same beach. Itâs on the itinerary.â
âAhhh, the famous Thomas Nash itinerary.â
âWould you have it any other way?â
âOf course not,â said Lucy, hugging him again. âI need someone to take command of my miserable existence.â
âOh dear, are the hardships of student life taking their toll on poor little Lucy?â
She pinched his arm and recoiled. âWell obviously youâre too old to remember, but Oxfordâs not all honey and roses.â
âOkay, whatâs his name?â asked Tom wearily.
Lucy looked convincingly aghast for all of a second before her face fell. âHugo Atkinson . . . although I now have a whole bunch of other names for him.â
âDidnât he like your hair?â
âThis wasnât done for him!â she protested, a touch too vehemently.
Tom was suddenly aware of the porter regarding their little theatre with curiosity. He paid the man off handsomely and opened the passenger door for Lucy.
âYou can tell me all about the bounder over lunch, but I think I might have found just the thing to help you get over him.â
âOh God, please, not another Italian lawyer.â
âFrancesco, I admit, proved to be something of a